Albert Ashwood, Oklahoma's director of emergency
management, was surveying last weekend's tornado damage with Gov. Mary Fallin
on Monday morning, when he told her they had to leave immediately. The weather,
he said, was getting worse, and the two of them needed to get to the command
center.

Two hours later, a tornado with winds reaching 190
mph cut a 17-mile swath through the metropolitan Oklahoma City area, leveling
hundreds of homes and leaving dozens dead.

Ashwood is the longest-serving state emergency
management chief in the country. He has worked at the Oklahoma Department of
Emergency Management since 1988 and, after his work in the aftermath of the
1995 Oklahoma City bombing, was appointed to lead it in 1997. He has served in
that role ever since, under both Democratic and Republican governors. This is
his 36th major disaster.

Oklahoma has been especially
hard-hit in recent years when it comes to natural disasters,
and experts in emergency management say Ashwood's long experience and
innovative thinking have helped ease those recoveries.

“It makes all the difference,” said Trina Sheets,
executive director of the National Emergency Management Association. “Disaster
victims can be assured he understands everything that needs to be done for
recovery.”

A good emergency manager is more of a coordinator
than a first responder, said R. David Paulison, a former administrator of the
Federal Emergency Management Agency. Oklahoma's response to the Monday
tornadoes shows the state was well-prepared, he said.

The White House approved a presidential disaster
declaration for Oklahoma just seven hours after the most lethal tornado touched
down, and the declaration includes damages from last weekend's tornadoes as
well.

“That happened almost immediately,” Paulison said.
“That tells me Albert and his crew are right on top of things, and the governor
has enough confidence in the emergency manager to know it's not a knee-jerk
reaction.”

Since Ashwood became chief of the emergency
management agency, he has helped the state recover through 36 disasters that
merited presidential disaster declarations.

Paulison also said the quick deployment of
search-and-rescue teams showed Oklahoma was ready, because it did not take long
for the state to ask for and receive out-of-state teams to assist in the
effort.

Even Fallin, the governor, told reporters Tuesday
she deployed the National Guard before knowing what their exact mission would
be after the storm.

At the briefing Tuesday, Ashwood stood next to the
governor behind a lectern, wearing a white shirt sleeve shirt with the logo of
his agency. He fielded questions about funding formulas for safety rooms, which
could protect occupants from tornadoes. But mostly he watched as the heads of
state and local agencies updated reporters on relief efforts.

The county would be taking in loose livestock at the
fairground. The insurance commissioner talked about providing mobile ATMs and
protecting residents against fraud. The police, firefighters, school officials
and utility executives updated residents on their progress.

“(Ashwood) is very much someone who prefers to be in
the background, in support, allowing local elected officials and the governor
to provide that very public and needed leadership. He will do absolutely
everything that the state can to help disaster victims recover as quickly as
possible,” Sheets said.

Ashwood is well-known among emergency managers far
from Oklahoma. He is a former NEMA president who is now leading the group's
efforts to reform how federal disaster relief funds are administered. He is
also known as a mentor and a coach, Paulison said.

“There's no secrets
out there about who does well and who doesn't do well in these types of
disasters,” Paulison said. “He has a very calm demeanor. He doesn't run around
with his hair on fire. He's very thoughtful about what he says. That commands a
lot of respect.”

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